| RUSSIA NEVER SLEEPS: A group of top agencies in the United States and United Kingdom on Thursday warned of an ongoing campaign by Russian government-backed hackers using “brute force” hacking techniques to target hundreds of organizations around the world. The FBI, the National Security Agency, the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, and the U.K.’s National Cyber Security Centre issued a joint advisory outlining the hacking campaign, ongoing since 2019 and carried out by the Russian General Staff Main Intelligence Directorate (GRU). The GRU, an advanced persistent threat organization, has used what the agencies described as “brute force access attempts” against the targeted organizations over the past two years. The hundreds of organizations targeted include government and military agencies, political groups, think tanks, defense contractors, energy companies, logistics companies, media outlets, law firms and higher education institutions. The new advisory was issued on the heels of escalating cyberattacks on critical U.S. organizations either linked to the Russian government or to Russian-speaking cyber criminals likely being harbored by the nation, raising U.S.-Russian tensions. Read more about the ongoing attacks here. BLOCKED: A federal judge on Wednesday blocked a Florida social media law that would have fined companies for kicking politicians off their platforms. District Judge Robert Hinkle of the Northern District of Florida issued a preliminary injunction on Wednesday to stop the law from going into effect on Thursday, The Washington Post reported. Hinkle issued the injunction as he believes the law will be found unconstitutional. “The plaintiffs are likely to prevail on the merits of their claim that these statutes violate the First Amendment,” Hinkle wrote. “There is nothing that could be severed and survive.” Tech trade groups sued the state after Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) signed a bill into law that would fine companies $250,000 a day for banning statewide politicians from their platforms and $25,000 a day for other politicians. Read more here. GETTR MAKES AN ENTRANCE: A new platform that describes itself as a “non-bias social network” has launched and is reportedly tied to allies of former President Trump's. The platform, called Gettr, is in both the Apple App Store and Google Play store as of Thursday afternoon. The launch comes after mainstream platforms, including Twitter and Facebook, took action to suspend or ban the former president after the Jan. 6 riot at the Capitol. Former Trump campaign aide Jason Miller is leading the effort behind Gettr, Politico reported. Last month, sources confirmed to The Hill that Miller was leaving his role as Trump’s spokesperson for a tech start-up. Axios also reported Thursday that Miller is launching Gettr. Miller did not respond to requests for comment. Read more here. GOVERNMENTS BEWARE: Chinese-speaking hackers recently targeted the top tiers of the Afghan government, along with the governments of other nearby nations, research published Thursday found. According to findings from cybersecurity group Check Point Research, a hacking group known as “IndigoZebra” is involved in an ongoing espionage effort against the Afghan government through the use of malicious phishing emails. Some of the emails masqueraded as coming from the Office of the President of Afghanistan, and targeted the Afghan National Security Council (NSC). Emails urged the targeted employee to review an attachment regarding details of a NSC press conference. The Afghan government was not the only one in the region targeted by the same group. Check Point found evidence of ongoing targeting of the governments of Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan. Check Point’s investigation into these efforts is ongoing. Read more about the hacking campaign here. |
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